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Query: EC:2.7.11.13 (
protein kinase C
)
49,245
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent evidence suggests that chronic ingestion of small quantities of ethanol may protect myocardium from ischemic injury by activating many of the endogenous signal transduction elements that have been implicated during other forms of preconditioning. Studies conducted in a variety of animal models in vitro and in vivo have indicated that chronic ethanol consumption improves
functional recovery
after global ischemia, reduces biochemical markers of ischemic injury, and decreases myocardial infarct size. Many of these beneficial actions appear to occur independent of alterations in systemic and coronary hemodynamics and transmural myocardial perfusion. To date, adenosine type 1 (A(1)) receptors, alpha(1)-adrenoceptors, the epsilon isoform of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
), and adenosine triphosphate-dependent potassium (K(ATP)) channels have been shown to mediate cardioprotection associated with chronic ethanol ingestion. These data suggest another mechanism by which chronic, intermittent consumption of ethanol may reduce overall cardiovascular mortality, decrease the incidence of coronary artery disease, and improve survival after myocardial infarction in humans. In this brief review, we discuss current evidence supporting a role for endogenous signaling in chronic ethanol-induced myocardial protection against ischemic injury.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of myocardial protection produced by chronic ethanol consumption. 1500 18
Ischemic preconditioning affords the most powerful protection to a heart submitted to a prolonged ischemia-reperfusion. During the past decade, a huge amount of work allowed to better understand the features of this protective effect as well as the molecular mechanisms. Ischemic preconditioning reduces infarct size and improves
functional recovery
; its effects on arrhythmias remain debated. Triggering of the protection involves cell surface receptors that activate pro-survival pathways including
protein kinase C
, PI3-kinase, possibly Akt and ERK1/2, whose downstream targets remain to be determined. Much attention has been recently focused on the role of mitochondrial K(+)ATP channels and the permeability transition pore that seem to play a major role in the progression toward irreversible cellular injury. Based on these experimental studies attempts have been made to transfer preconditioning from bench to bedside. Human experimental models of ischemic preconditioning have been set up, including cardiac surgery, coronary angioplasty or treadmill exercise, to perform pathophysiological studies. Yet, protecting the heart of CAD (coronary artery disease) patients requires a pharmacological approach. The IONA trial has been an example of the clinical utility of preconditioning. It helped to demonstrate that chronic administration of nicorandil, a K(+)ATP opener that mimics ischemic preconditioning in experimental preparations, improves the cardiovascular prognosis in CAD patients. Recent experimental studies appear further encouraging. It appears that "postconditioning" the heart (i.e. performing brief episodes of ischemia-reperfusion at the time of reperfusion) is as protective as preconditioning. In other words, a therapeutic intervention performed as late as at the time of reflow can still significantly limit infarct size. Further work is needed to determine whether this may be transferred to the clinical practice.
...
PMID:[How to use the paradigm of ischemic preconditioning to protect the heart?]. 1519 Apr 69
For the first time the involvement of C-Reactive protein (CRP) in early (acute) and delayed ischemic (IPC) and pharmacological (chemical) preconditioning (CPC) in an in vivo model of rat myocardial infarction was presented. Acute IPC was produced by three 5 minute occlusion (ischemia) periods interspersed with 5 minute reperfusion, followed by 30 minute occlusion of the left coronary artery and 2 hour reperfusion injury. Acute CPC was produced by a k-opioid receptor agonist U50488H (5 mg/kg) applied i.v. 15 minutes before 30 minute ischemia/ 2 hour reperfusion. Delayed preconditioning was produced by 30 minute ischemia/ 2 hour reperfusion, induced 24 hour after either ischemic or pharmacological preconditioning. The myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury was evaluated on the basis of total and cardiac creatine kinase isoenzyme activity,
functional recovery
of the heart (ECG), infarct size (% IS/RA) and mortality at the end of the experiments. The results obtained showed that: k-opioid receptor agonist U50488H mimics both the acute and delayed IPC in the above experimental protocol; Both acute IPC and most probably CPC act by opening of K(ATP) channels (the effects were blocked by nonspecific ATP-sensitive K channel blocker glybenclamide), and via activation of
protein kinase C
(a selective protein kinase C inhibitor chelerythrine blocked the efects); C-reactive protein (CRP) was significantly elevated by 54% in non-preconditioned acute ischemia/reperfusion injury. The elevation was more pronounced (82% increase) 24 hour after non-preconditioned ischemia/reperfusion injury. It reflected very well the increase in cardiac isoenzymes, infarct size and mortality of the rats, and can be used as a marker of the severity of myocardial injury in this model; The increase of CRP was prevented by both IPC and CPC in early, and especially in late preconditioning. This confirms the involvement of CRP as a marker in cardiac ischemic/reperfusion injury. It was concluded that in addition to the established involvement of adenosine, bradykinin, opioid and other receptors, a suppression of myocardial CRP/complement production might be involved in the biological mechanism of preconditioning. This could be a promising perspective in clinical interventions against ischemia/reperfusion injuries of the heart.
...
PMID:The role of C-reactive protein in ischemia/reperfusion injury and preconditioning in a rat model of myocardial infarction. 1519 50
The protective effects of the
PKC
activator Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) were investigated in electrically field stimulated (EFS) rat isolated ventricular myocytes following 7 min of metabolic inhibition induced by cyanide, iodoacetic acid and substrate removal, followed by reperfusion. PMA reduced reperfusion damage and increased
functional recovery
(response to EFS) following 10 min reperfusion from 20.0 +/- 10.7% of control myocytes to 90.0 +/- 7.2% following 5 min PMA pre-treatment (p<0.001). PMA significantly increased the time from the onset of MI before the myocytes failed to respond to EFS from 135 +/- 19s in control cells to 200 +/- 14s in PMA pre-treated cells (p<0.05). Additionally, there was an increase in the time to rigor with PMA pre-treated cells entering rigor 255 +/- 17s after MI compared to 174 +/-15s in control cell (p<0.05), indicating a delay in ATP depletion. During MI PMA pre-treated cells showed a significantly smaller increase in [Ca(2+)]i compared to control myocytes. Following reperfusion the majority of PMA pre-treated myocytes recovered calcium transients in response to EFS and diastolic Ca(2+) levels not significantly different to those seen prior to metabolic inhibition. Activation of
PKC
is thought to involve translocation to the particulate fraction. Our results demonstrate the presence of PKC-alpha, beta, gamma, delta, iota, lambda/zeta in rat ventricular myocytes, all of which translocate to the membrane in response to PMA.
...
PMID:Protection from the effects of metabolic inhibition and reperfusion in contracting isolated ventricular myocytes via protein kinase C activation. 1527 27
Isoflurane enhances myocardial
functional recovery
and improves energy levels after ischemia. We sought to determine whether isoflurane-induced cardioprotection is mediated by
protein kinase C
(
PKC
). The Langendorff model was used, and isolated perfused rat hearts were separated into untreated, isoflurane, chelerythrine (
PKC
inhibitor) plus isoflurane, and chelerythrine groups. All hearts were subjected to treatment before ischemia, followed by 30 min of ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion. We recorded hemodynamic variables, measured metabolites by high-performance liquid chromatography, and analyzed subcellular localization of
PKC
isoforms by Western blot analysis. Isoflurane significantly improved the recovery of left ventricular developed pressure, attenuated the depletion of myocardial adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and creatine phosphate at 15 min of ischemia, enhanced the recovery of myocardial ATP and creatine phosphate concentrations after ischemia, and was associated with the translocation of
PKC
-delta and -epsilon to the membrane. Chelerythrine suppressed the translocation of
PKC
-delta and -epsilon and blocked the improvement of cardiac function and ATP. We conclude that isoflurane delays the decrease in ATP during ischemia and improves the recovery of mechanical function and the energy state 60 min after ischemia. These effects of isoflurane are dependent on the activation of
PKC
.
...
PMID:Activation of protein kinase C contributes to the isoflurane-induced improvement of functional and metabolic recovery in isolated ischemic rat hearts. 1538 39
We have proposed that pharmacological preconditioning, leading to
PKC
-epsilon activation, in hearts improves postischemic
functional recovery
through a decrease in actomyosin ATPase activity and subsequent ATP conservation. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether moderate
PKC
-independent decreases in actomyosin ATPase are sufficient to improve myocardial postischemic function. Rats were given propylthiouracil (PTU) for 8 days to induce a 25% increase in beta-myosin heavy chain with a 28% reduction in actomyosin ATPase activity. Recovery of postischemic left ventricular developed pressure (LVDP) was significantly higher in PTU-treated rat hearts subjected to 30 min of global ischemia than in control hearts: 57.9 +/- 6.2 vs. 32.6 +/- 5.1% of preischemic values. In addition, PTU-treated hearts exhibited a delayed onset of rigor contracture during ischemia and a higher global ATP content after ischemia. In the second part of our study, we demonstrated a lower maximal actomyosin ATPase and a higher global ATP content after ischemia in human troponin T (TnT) transgenic mouse hearts. In mouse hearts with and without a point mutation at F110I of human TnT, recovery of postischemic LVDP was 55.4 +/- 5.5 and 62.5 +/- 14.5% compared with 20.0 +/- 2.9% in nontransgenic mouse hearts after 35 min of global ischemia. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that moderate decreases in actomyosin ATPase activity result in net ATP conservation that is sufficient to improve postischemic contractile function.
...
PMID:Modest actomyosin energy conservation increases myocardial postischemic function. 1549 25
Whereas previous studies have shown that opening of the mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K(+) (mitoK(ATP)) channel protects the adult heart against ischemia-reperfusion injury, it remains to be established whether this mechanism also operates in the developing heart. Isolated spontaneously beating hearts from 4-day-old chick embryos were subjected to 30 min of anoxia followed by 60 min of reoxygenation. The chrono-, dromo-, and inotropic disturbances, as well as alterations of the electromechanical delay (EMD), reflecting excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling, were investigated. Production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the ventricle was determined using the intracellular fluorescent probe 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin (DCFH). Effects of the specific mitoK(ATP) channel opener diazoxide (Diazo, 50 microM) or the blocker 5-hydroxydecanoate (5-HD, 500 microM), the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 50 microM), the antioxidant N-(2-mercaptopropionyl)glycine (MPG, 1 mM), and the
PKC
inhibitor chelerythrine (Chel, 5 microM) on oxidative stress and postanoxic
functional recovery
were determined. Under normoxia, the baseline parameters were not altered by any of these pharmacological agents, alone or in combination. During the first 20 min of postanoxic reoxygenation, Diazo doubled the peak of ROS production and, interestingly, accelerated recovery of ventricular EMD and the PR interval. Diazo-induced ROS production was suppressed by 5-HD, MPG, or L-NAME, but not by Chel. Protection of ventricular EMD by Diazo was abolished by 5-HD, MPG, L-NAME, or Chel, whereas protection of the PR interval was abolished by L-NAME exclusively. Thus pharmacological opening of the mitoK(ATP) channel selectively improves postanoxic recovery of cell-to-cell communication and ventricular E-C coupling. Although the NO-, ROS-, and
PKC
-dependent pathways also seem to be involved in this cardioprotection, their interrelation in the developing heart can differ markedly from that in the adult myocardium.
...
PMID:mitoKATP channel activation in the postanoxic developing heart protects E-C coupling via NO-, ROS-, and PKC-dependent pathways. 1555 May 17
The aldose reductase pathway has been demonstrated to be a key component of myocardial ischemia reperfusion injury. Previously, we demonstrated that increased lactate/pyruvate ratio, a measure of cytosolic NADH/NAD+, is an important change that drives the metabolic cascade mediating ischemic injury. This study investigated signaling mechanisms by which the aldose reductase pathway mediates myocardial ischemic injury. Specifically, the influence of the aldose reductase pathway flux on JAK-STAT signaling was examined in perfused hearts. Induction of global ischemia in rats resulted in JAK2 activation followed by STAT5 activation. Pharmacological inhibition of aldose reductase or sorbitol dehydrogenase blocked JAK2 and STAT5 activation and was associated with lower lactate/pyruvate ratio and lower
protein kinase C
activity. Niacin, known to lower cytosolic NADH/NAD+ ratio independent of the aldose reductase pathway inhibition, also blocked JAK2 and STAT5 activation. Inhibition of
protein kinase C
also blocked JAK2 and STAT5 activation. Transgenic mice overexpressing human aldose reductase exhibited increased JAK2 and STAT5 activation. Pharmacological inhibition of JAK2 reduced ischemic injury and improved
functional recovery
similar to that observed in aldose reductase pathway inhibited mice hearts. These data, for the first time, demonstrate JAK-STAT signaling by the aldose reductase pathway in ischemic hearts and is, in part, due to changes in cytosolic redox state.
...
PMID:Aldose reductase pathway mediates JAK-STAT signaling: a novel axis in myocardial ischemic injury. 1574 88
Preconditioning protocols that protect the heart from ischemic injury may aid in the development of new therapies. However, the temporal window of cardioprotection is limited to a few days after the preconditioning stimulus. Here we report a sustained cardioprotected phenotype in mice expressing a tetracycline transactivator (tTA) transcription factor under the control of the alpha-myosin heavy chain (alphaMHC) promoter. alphaMHC-tTA mice were originally designed for tetracycline-regulated gene expression in the heart (Tet system). However, we found that after 45 min of global ischemia at 37 degrees C, left ventricular developed pressure (LVDP) of Langendorff-perfused alphaMHC-tTA mouse hearts rapidly recovered in 5 min to 60% of initial levels, whereas LVDP of wild-type (WT) littermates recovered to only 10% of the initial level. Improved postischemic
recovery of function
for alphaMHC-tTA hearts was associated with a 50% decrease of infarct size and a significantly smaller release of lactate dehydrogenase to the coronary effluent. Improved postischemic recovery was not attributable to differences in coronary flow that was similar for WT- and alphaMHC-tTA hearts during recovery. Moreover, improved postischemic recovery of alphaMHC-tTA hearts was not abolished by inhibitors of classical cardioprotective effectors (mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K+ channels,
PKC
, or adenosine receptors), suggesting a novel mechanism. Finally, the tetracycline analog doxycycline, which inhibits binding of tTA to DNA, did not abolish improved recovery for alphaMHC-tTA hearts. The sustained cardioprotected phenotype of alphaMHC-tTA hearts may have implications for developing new therapies to minimize cardiac ischemic injury. Furthermore, investigations of cardioprotection using the Tet system may be aberrantly influenced by sustained preconditioning induced by cardiac transgenesis with tTA.
...
PMID:Sustained preconditioning induced by cardiac transgenesis with the tetracycline transactivator. 1624 14
The mechanisms underlying the age-dependent reversal of female cardioprotection are poorly understood and complicated by findings that estrogen replacement is ineffective at reducing cardiovascular mortality in postmenopausal women. Although several protective signals have been identified in young animals, including
PKC
and Akt, how these signals are affected by age, estrogen deficiency, and ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) remains unknown. To determine the independent and combined effects of age and estrogen deficiency on I/R injury and downstream
PKC
-Akt signaling, adult and aged female F344 rats (n = 12/age) with ovaries intact or ovariectomy (Ovx) were subjected to I/R using Langendorff perfusion (31-min global-ischemia). Changes in cytosolic (s), nuclear (n), mitochondrial (m)
PKC
(delta, epsilon) levels, and changes in total Akt and mGSK-3beta phosphorylation after I/R were assessed by Western blot analysis. Senescence increased infarct size 50% in ovary-intact females (P < 0.05), whereas no differences in LV
functional recovery
or estradiol levels were observed. Ovx reduced
functional recovery
to a greater extent in aged compared with adult rats (P < 0.05). In aged (vs. adult), levels of m- and
nPKC
(-delta, -epsilon) were markedly decreased, whereas mGSK3beta levels were increased (P < 0.05). Ovx led to greater levels of sPKC(-delta, -epsilon) independent of age (P < 0.05). I/R reduced p-Akt(Ser473) levels by 57% and increased mGSK-3beta accumulation 1.77-fold (P < 0.05) in aged, ovary-intact females. These data suggest, for the first time, that estrogen alone cannot protect the aged female myocardium from I/R damage and that age- and estrogen-dependent alterations in
PKC
, Akt, and GSK-3beta signaling may contribute to loss of ischemic tolerance.
...
PMID:Estrogen deficiency decreases ischemic tolerance in the aged rat heart: Roles of PKCdelta, PKCepsilon, Akt, and GSK3beta. 1700 61
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